Fennie+Mehl

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Joey Brown, the Director of Real Estate for Silicon Valley Bank, explains to American Builder’s Quarterly how F+M’s lookbook is enabling her global company to maintain its brand while still having unique locally inspired settings for each bank.

Silicon Valley Bank’s brand underlines working together to move their customers forward. SVB offices take that to heart. Learn how F+M designed a unique take on greeting and allowing customers into their offices.

F+M, known for mindfully designing spaces that attract and retain top-tier tech hires, was highlighted in a recent TechRepublic article explaining just how it’s done and why this is a smart business decision.

FENNIE+MEHL only hires highly creative self-starters and then incentivizes all employees with a unique compensation model. They also push clients to see their own culture as a critical value proposition.

For the third year in a row F+M has been recognized by the IIDAHonor Awards. This year we are twice blessed receiving both the Give Award (for improving a physical spaces’s impact on society) and the People’s Choice Award.

Fennie + Mehl Architects have always acted in an environmental sustainable manner. Since 2002, we have implemented working 80 hours every 9 days thereby eliminating over 160 round trip commutes a year for our staff. As a

The Box Headquarters Relocation was a design build tenant improvement to an existing 97,000 SF, 3-story office building for new headquarter space. The project scope included open office space, private offices, conference and

Walking into the offices of GitHub is like stepping into an alternate reality; one where work closely resembles play and creativity is valued as highly as productivity. Untraditional is an understatement when it comes to the

FENNIE+MEHL Architects have designed the offices of Silicon Valley Bank located in San Francisco, California. Silicon Valley Bank, a unique global commercial bank focusing on investments in emerging technology

At the core of GitHub technology is social collaboration, which we find not only physically evident in their new office space itself but also manifested throughout the design process, a seamless collaboration between

The partners of San Francisco’s Jackson Square Aviation loved their neighborhood and their building, a two-story brick and timber beauty dating from the mid-nineteenth century. But after being purchased by a Japanese